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Show ; Friday, March TIIR OGDEN POST SM" S T A GE the Fox picture which comes to the Egyptian theatre next Sunday, is a story written by Frederick II. lirennan and IiecKy THE SIN SISTER Gardiner. Nancy Carroll, Lawrence Gray and Josephine Dunn play the leading roles. ifri w SCREEN - - AMUSEMENTS WHAT'S GOING ON EC Yn IAN Now playing, Now llardboiled; starling Sunday, The Sin Sister." I paying, Iloot Gibson in Duming the Wind; Sunday, Tom and Sweet Sixteen. The I.one k'Lar Ranger Mix in which comes t0 the EByptian today and tomorrow, is a story which calloused little Follies girl for a dashhji love of a concerns the who millionaire play boy keeps Broadway in a turmoil with hu lavish spending and exploits. Sally ONeil plays the part nf the Follies girl. HARRRftIT PH nlIlDDUlLLU PARAMOUNT Now playing, the sound end color picture, Redskin, with Richard Iix; starting Sunday, Dolores Del Rio, Ralph Forbes and Karl Dane in the synchronized picture, The Trail of 1)8. OGDEN 15. moa COLONIAL Saturday, Kail Dane and Ccorge K. Arthur in Brotherly Love and comedy, Growing Pains; Sunday and Monday, Pola Negri and Nils Aslher in Ixive of an Actress and Love Is Blond"; Tuesday and Wednesday, Owen Moore and Helene Costello in Husbands For Rent; Thursday and Friday, Fred Thomson in Kit Carson. Saturday, Bill Cody and Duane Thompson in Wolves of the City; Sunday, Ken Maynard in The Glorious Trail; Monday, Alice White in The Show Girls; Tuesday, Bill Cody in The Price of Fear; Wednesday, Coiinr.c Griffith in The Outcast; Thursday, Claire Windsor in "Opening Night; Friday, Charlie Murray in The Head Man. LYCEUM Monday evening, A Night in Tipperary. BERTH ANA Dancing. The Trail of 98, at Clara Bow Tells How To Care for the Hands Paramount, is Real Epic of the North On first thought hands may seem A'tcene from 'The Sin Sifter," Fox Picture THE NEW TALKIES ARE A HIT! What The Covered Wagon was to the west, The Birth of a Nation was to the south, Way Down East was to New England, is just what The Trail of 08 is to the far north. It is only once in a great while that film producers succeed in turning out a real epic. Not that they dont try; ts because there isnt enough material of the right kind to make many epics. Put has certainly hit on a story of epic quality in The Trail of 5)8, which was directed by Clarence Brown and is now being shown with sound synchronization and a surrounding sound program at the Paromount theatre starting Sunday. When you see this picture you not only see the days of the mad gold rush to the Klondike you live them. The writer of this review had expected to witness a great spectacle when he went to see this picture. What he did sec was a mighty love story set in a magnificent and spectacular frame. Tnkc tho love story out of The Trail of 98 and you still have n marvelous spectacle put it back and you have an epic. Clarence Brown has succeeded in doing something which is seldom done. He has filmed mighty, spectacular scenes, but he shows them only to let you realise the effect they have on the individuals in his picture. You see thousands of people in a single scene, but that scene isn't crowded. It lyis square miles of background background that takes away the spectacular and gives balance. The picture has real grandeur and but it also has heart interest. Tho principals get their reactions from these great scenes, these you great numbers of people. What othsee is individual reaction to what erwise would he the spectacular. Every member of the enormous cast deserves credit for what he did in The Theres Dolores Del Trail of 98. who has Rio, always been a good performer. In this picture she is an artiste. We haven't seen as much of Ralph Forbes on the screen as we would like to; we want to see him All of us know and love Harry Carey ns a sterling actor. He is at his best in the villainous role of Jack Locasto. There are Karl Dane, George Cooper, Emily Fitzroy, troupers all, and mighty fine performers. Theres Tully Marshall, than whom t lie re is none better in such, roles as Mctro-Coldwyn-Ma- UIKKCIION L. MARCUS ENTERPRISES NOW SHOWING AN AMAZING SPECTACLE IN SOUND and COLOR v !. A PARAMOUNT PARAMOUNT ACT PICTURE PARAMOUNT NEWS mag-nificen- STARTING SUNDAY Fully Synchronized With Music and Sound! Thrills Never Before in Pictures ! A STORY OF ROMANCE AND ADVENTURE of brave men and women stirred to the depths by the quest for Gold. The camera travels the trails over CIIILKOOT PASS WHICH BROKE THE HEARTS OF SO MANY MEN PROUD OF THEIR STRENGTH. DOLORES DEL RIO RALPH FORBES KARL DANE IN wmraBXMBgxnagaM ROBERT W. SERVICESS The Western Are That Sets tho Pare in a Whirlwind PI-- t with his . 50 WILD RIDING COWBOYS hi Burning the WiikT H.rd Kr ncTURi Baring S.iio-i.j- v in the Dr ipcratc I! L" Fighting Deeds of th-i- i Thriil and Entertain! !,;v ' Today and Tomorrow GDERJ THEATRE pt ill-fitti- ng se, of-ten- er. lit mantic to have little to do with It. Probably nothing, however, but the eyes are a better index to a girls personality than the hands. Well-kehands denote personal pride an dtruly beautiful hands are a nasset every girl should strive to possess. First of all let me explode the myth that house work ruins the hands. A girl does not have to be a lady of leisure to havo beautifully groomed hands. Just remember to have a lotion, glycerine and rose water is excellent, by the kitchen sink and in the bathroom. Apply this lotion to the hands each time after drying them. Never wash your hands and dry them without using the lotion. It is a splendid idea for the bus ness woman to keep a bottle of the glycerine and rose water in her desk at the office and follow that same rule. Beautifully kept, lustrous finger nails are absolutely essential. A girl with unkempt nails could no more have it than could one who wore clothes. The person with brittle nails will find that bathing the fingertips in warm olive oil every night for two weeks is a great tonic for this conThen continue the warm oil dition. baths at least once a week. A manicure, either done by yourself or a professional, is essential at least once a week. Lemon is excellent to remove stains from the hands, and is also a good bleaching aid. The best way to bleach the hands to remove summer sun burn is to mix Tully takes upon the screen. The day that man dies the movies and the movie-goin- g world will have cause to mourn. Because there is not space to give a lengthy review of The Trail of 98 we must be content to say its a great picture, marvelously directed and the characters well portrayed. It is a picture that will help the motion picture reach the plane it is bound for one of the fine arts. OX See N fkom 'HAIDBOILED witU SALLY O'NEIL NE OX life' Glimpses into the back-stag- e of the theatre are revealed in Ralph Inces FBO production of Arthur Somers Roches story, Hardboiled, which, coming to the Egyptian theatre today for an engagement of two days, concerns the love of a calloused little Follies girl for a dashing millionaire playboy, who keeps Broadway in turmoil with his lavish spending and exploits. Sally ONeil is cast as the diminutive Follies girl who marries the playboy for his money, but loses her heart almond meal with peroxide to form a paste. Apply it to the hands and arms if desired, and leave it for twenty minutes. One or two of these treatments will usually have the desired effect. Let me stress this point: Dont Jbe afraid to use your hands. Exercise hclns to make them graceful. And grace is an inherent part of to her husband when he losei fc wealth. Donald Reed appears opposite Kk ONeil as the young spendthrift, tk son of an oil millionaire. Lilyan Tashman interprets the die acter of a sophisticated Follies chorine, the chum of Miss ONeil.' & dentally, Miss Tashman is a fornr member of Ziegfield Follies, and os of its most celebrated beauties. Others in the cast are Bob Sinclair, & M. Ness, Tom OGrady and Alpha: Ethier. Ralph Ince directed. Enid Hibhtr wrote the continuity. picture, including the apectacuh: gambling den scene. The actress was born in Santon,b: was brought in childhood to Nr York. She was graduated from C lumbia and went on the stage vi imitations of women of various tionalities singing distinctive ion She appeared on the legitimate New Work as prima donna in tv It. productions of the society of Amelia: singers, The Geisha and The K Lady Tsen Mei Back To Native Role kado. In Eagles The Letter A Chinese actress who made her 7 Clive Brook, Paramount feature fame at first by signing Irish songs now appears in an Oriental role in player, studied to be a lawyer. Tht The Letter. he took up newspaper writing. He a She is Lady Tsen Mei, well known also the author of several succeufc stage and picture actress, who has short stories. been called the only Chinese film star. Other Chinese players have been featLane Chandler is six feet, twoh ured and have reecived important ches tall, weighs 185 pounds, has roles, but she sprang into the exclu- dish brown and blue eyes Che sive circle of the stars in For the dler intendedhair to go into the tramp Freedom of the East, produced just but became s & tation business, at the close of the war. instead. Lady Tsen Mei in The Letter plays player the important role of the Chinese woWhen a boy, Emil Jannings K man in Singapore for whom Geoffrey the Hammond deserts planters wife, away from home to be a sailor, fe Leslie Crosbie. She appears in some nings latest starring picture is of the most important secens in the trayal. ell i ure i: lurch: .o ear1 f Hi The rillia rjtk iitrj rere uccet sent nyo o sdr t stag-i- 1 Ot G cult only plea un bett vho one plea will 0 irrit nan an ft |